To easily publish a project to OpenShift one can use the OpenShift server adapter. This adapter keeps track of your local changes and tells you if there are any that you can publish to OpenShift.
There are two situations where there are changes that you may publish to OpenShift: Firstly you may have uncommitted changes. The adapter will then commit and push them to OpenShift. Secondly you may have committed changes, that you didn't push yet. The adapter will then offer you to push them to OpenShift. Prior to Alpha1, the adapter wouldn't detect this latter usecase and falsely tell you that there are no changes that you could publish to OpenShift.

To easily publish a project to OpenShift one can use the OpenShift server adapter. This adapter keeps track of your local changes and tells you if there are any that you can publish to OpenShift.
There are two situations where there are changes that you may publish to OpenShift: Firstly you may have uncommitted changes. The adapter will then commit and push them to OpenShift. Secondly you may have committed changes, that you didn't push yet. The adapter will then offer you to push them to OpenShift. Prior to Alpha1, the adapter wouldn't detect this latter usecase and falsely tell you that there are no changes that you could publish to OpenShift.

Description

EXEC: in Servers view, select the adapter for your OpenShift application and pick Publish from its context menu

Result:
The adapter tells you that there are no local changes. If you look at your local project you'll see in the git-decoration that the local git repo is ahead of 1 commit of the remote, so there is a local commit that could be pushed/published.

Expected result:
The adapter should tell you that there are local changes and ask you if you want to publish them.